16. he had--Greek, "having." John takes up the
description from time to time, irrespective of the construction,
with separate strokes of the pencil [ALFORD].
in . . . right hand seven stars--
(Re 1:20;
Re 2:1; 3:1).
He holds them as a star-studded "crown of glory," or "royal diadem," in
His hand: so
Isa 62:3.
He is their Possessor and Upholder.
out of . . . mouth went--Greek, "going forth";
not wielded in the hand. His WORD is omnipotent in
executing His will in punishing sinners. It is the sword of His Spirit.
Reproof and punishment, rather than its converting winning power, is
the prominent point. Still, as He encourages the churches, as well as
threatens, the former quality of the Word is not excluded. Its
two edges (back and front) may allude to its double efficacy,
condemning some, converting others. TERTULLIAN
[Epistle against Judaizers], takes them of the Old and the
New Testaments. RICHARD OF
ST. VICTOR, "the Old
Testament cutting externally our carnal, the New Testament
internally, our spiritual sins."
sword--Greek, "romphaia," the Thracian long and
heavy broad sword: six times in Revelation, once only elsewhere in New
Testament, namely,
Lu 2:35.
sun . . . in his strength--in unclouded power. So
shall the righteous shine, reflecting the image of the Sun of
righteousness. TRENCH notices that this
description, sublime as a purely mental conception, would be
intolerable if we were to give it an outward form. With the Greeks,
æsthecial taste was the first consideration, to which all others
must give way. With the Hebrews, truth and the full representation
ideally of the religious reality were the paramount consideration, that
representation being designed not to be outwardly embodied, but to
remain a purely mental conception. This exalting of the essence above
the form marks their deeper religious earnestness.
JFB.
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